Weird Harold
Opinionated Old Fart
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2000
- Posts
- 23,768
footlongish said:a) Most jpeg viewing software allows the viewer to zoom in and out as they please. So the computer screen size is irrelevant, unless you ever get a monitor with more pixels. Then larger image sizes are preferable.
I'm well aware of the ability to zoom in, out and "fit to screen" but you're missing the point -- no matter how big or small the picture is, when it's "fit to screen" it's visually 800x600 pixels. Zooming in on a big image -- and I do have several big images on my computer -- only allows me to see part of the picture. I'm well aware of the advantage that a few million extra pixels provide and make good use of that advantage when I need to -- I do NOT need the "advantage" of wasted disk space and millions of extra pixels for most photos -- I never see them, never use them and have better uses for the disk and RAM space they use.
footlongish said:b) ...The Nikon raw file for my D50 is about 5.1 MB, even though its a 6MP camera.
That's still a lot bigger than the 40-100 KB of a typical 800x600 JPeg and I have no current or anticpated NEED for a file that big.
footlongish said:c) hard drives are incredibly cheap these days. A 250 GB drive can be gotten for about $100. That will store about 100,000 2.5 MB images.
You are totally missing the point that I -- and a lot of people who ask about "starter cameras" -- have to plan our budget six months or more in advance to spend $100 dollars on a hard-drive -- and in my case, my mother board is old enough I'd have serious doubts about it's ability to support a 250GB drive so I'd have to budget for a new computer to acquire that size hard-drive.
My rent just went up 10% and I'm juggling the budget and menu to compensate for the reduction in the money available for food -- a bigger hard drive and a full featured digital SLR to fill it with pictures I'll never actually see at their full resolution is WAY down my list of wants and needs.
My advice to consider what a camera -- or any other purchase -- is going to be used for and buy something that fits the NEED is based in large part on an awareness that more people have to consider cost benefits and budget constraints than can afford to go out and buy the newst and best just because it IS the newest and best.
I'd love to have a camera like yours, but I DO NOT NEED ONE, and neither do most beginners lookig for a "starter camera."
 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		